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Saturday, October 25, 2014

A PDF OF THESE RULESI have always thought that the ability to turn undead was one of a cleric's most powerful skills, given the number of skeletons and zombies that seem to crawl about in the average D&D game. Yet I often find players have a good deal of confusion about how turning works, especially against a mixed group of undead or large numbers of the things. I've written up some turning rules with a long example that cover most of the oddities I tend to find in my games, and while it's nothing new or groundbreaking I believe this codification will benefit the players of clerics in my Apollyon game.

CLERICAL MAGIC

Can your Cleric Turn this - possibly

Divine Magic is different from
arcane magic in that it depends on the channeling of external power and grace
from powerful otherworldly entities rather than the caster’s own will and
knowledge to manipulate or overturn the static nature of the universe.Mechanically there are two systems of Clerical
Magic aboard the HMS Apollyon: Monistic practices, which behave mechanically
much like arcane magic, with a wide variety of spells that may be cast a
limited number of times, and Ecstatic practice which provides a smaller list of
spells, which do not always work and may fail catastrophically, but which may
be cast almost at will.

Despite mechanical differences they
employ, all divine traditions grant the power to hold at bay or even control
certain varieties of unnatural entities. While both the Temple of Lyriss and
the Church of the Queen are opposed to the undead, demonic, or diabolic in the
case of the Temple, the Ship Spirits oppose corruption and demonic influence
and the Cult of Leviathan may command the loyalty of sea creatures or drive off
Devils.

Thursday, October 23, 2014

The Scavengers in the last game of HMS Apollyon broke the only real law aboard the vessel and did a big favor for the 'kindly' old lich known as "The Unmentionable". In return Mr. Unmentionable has taken a break from his process of stitching various cadaverous limbs onto animated shark corpses to allow them to rummage through a crate of magical items and take one each as a reward. It's likely that Unmentionable doesn't know or much care about the value of these items, he's that kind of obsessed academic, or maybe he's started to see the party as a valuable set of catspaws?

1. Meathook Flail

A length of
corroded steel chain, interwoven with dried cracked sinews, the very rust of
its surface marking them with jagged glyphs of power.The 6’ long chain is both effectively
unbreakable without magical aid, and topped with a ghastly array of age pocked
hooks.Beside looking intimidating this
flail is a magical weapon with two necromantic powers.First, any living creature slain by the flail
will be raised as a zombie in D4 turns to wander the area it was created in and
attack any but the flail’s wielder.These (base: 2HD, ATK Bonus 0, -2 to Initiative, AC 13) creatures are
beyond communication except for the occasional moan of affection for their creator
or anger at anyone else.They won’t
follow commands or move from the immediate sight of their death and will decay
into uselessness after several sessions of play. The flail’s more terrible
power is the ability, once per session to animate into a writhing, clawing
hydra of metal and rust, attacking any the wielder commands it to for 1d6
rounds.The spirit animating the flail
will require only 1 HD of damage to drive off (temporarily it can be summoned
anew next session) but is immune to
normal weapons and attacks with an ATK bonus of +4 and an AC of 15.

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

The Overloaded Encounter Die (and several other rules below) is an idea stolen directly from
Brendan at Necropraxis, and one that I first enjoyed in his “Finchbox” game – a
vaguely ancient Chinese sandbox populated with Matt Finch modules.I have since adopted the die in my own Apollyon
game, and it may be the single best element of that game, because it makes
exploration tense/interesting, encourages player activity and allows disorganized GMs
like myself to ‘keep track’ of several variables without complex GM facing
subsystems. It may be worth noting that
this idea seems to have its origins in Torchbearer, which simply puts
everything on a brutally efficient timer, so that player resources rapidly
diminish.

Weights and
Measures for Scavengers Aboard the HMS Apollyon

As a system or a ‘hack’ of
1970’s era D&D The HMS APOLLYON aims for relatively flat power curves (for
both characters and monsters) and a focus on survival exploration and treasure
hunting rather than combat and heroics.At the same time it’s the goal of the setting to focus on atmosphere and
character development through play rather than mechanics, and so I have tried
to use simple abstract mechanics rather than complex simulations for as many
elements as possible.

In
exploration two, perhaps counter intuitive, subsystems work to increase the
tension of delving into new areas, and atmosphere and simplify record keeping
for both player and GM.The first of
these is an encumbrance system that may seem strict, or possibly ridiculous at
first, but has in play proven to be helpful at giving explorer’s meaningful
choices about what they choose to take with them into the hull, without
requiring the sort of calculations by coin weight that classic D&D
encumbrance either rapidly fall to the side or turn the game into an exercise
in spreadsheet use.

The Second
Element is the use of an “overloaded encounter” die for random encounters,
where every exploration turn (traditionally 10 minutes of character time)
results in something happening.Each pip
on the traditional D6 random encounter check (rolled every turn) has a result,
and while one of those results is a random encounter, the other five represent
either environmental events or a depletion of party resources.Combined with an encumbrance system that
makes resource management an actual element of gameplay and makes Strength a
useful statistic for all sorts of adventurers.

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

A companion piece to "Demons of the North" and "Dwarves are Horrible" discussing the oddities and inhuman awfulness that I like to give to demihumans when I run Anomolous Subsurface Environment. Vanilla Halflings aren't perhaps as bad as Dwarves in their boring almost featureless description, which universally (except for Darksun's jungle dwelling cannibals) seems a pallid and half-hearted copy of the Shire's Hobbits. In a lot of games lately halflings seem to be the first demihuman race to get replaced - with anthropomorphic animal people usually, or with goblins - this isn't a bad thing, but it shows a certain exhaustion or disdain within the tabletop hobby for halflings. ASE keeps halflings fairly close to the vanilla D&D norm, but like dwarves and elves it adds the twist that halflings are the result of ancient goblin genetic muckery (goblins being the debased descendents of 'grey' aliens). I expand on this idea and have recast ASE's Halflings as an oppressed but internal (they have no culture or homeland to return to) minority within Denethix.

“Are
Halflings even a people?More a plague,
like poverty or the weeping cysts -
another blight of these cursed times, roiling across the land and lingering to
choke the life out of anywhere it has taken root, much like the clouds of sick
rock gas that used to boil from the Lanthanide Wastes” – Ray 4375 Beta, field
researcher 3rd form – Temple of Science

A pair of Classic Jeff Dee Halfling

Halflings
have it bad, and most, both halfling and others think they deserve it.

Sunday, October 12, 2014

I've been taking it easy with creating game content this week, but I did draw up these maps for Sorcerer's Skull. I don't know what his plans are for them exactly, but it was nice to draw a sea monster.

First one is hand done with minimal treatment, the one below has been messed with via some filters.

Also I'm kinda trying to figure out what the next project should be. I've got a couple of plans, but not sure what I want to do. First, finish Tomb of the Rocketmen, and put it out as a bare-bones PDF (it's similar in scope to Dread Machine) and then maybe put it together in with rewrites of the other ASE Denethix Marches projects (perhaps including a redone Obelisk and Red Demon). Second, finish up another ASE adventure that I wrote 80% of and dropped - the Old Brewery as the basis of a few ASE urban adventures (Old Brewery, The Grunky Escapade and Tower Adventure I wrote up with a zombie version of He-Man's Two-Bad. Lastly abandon these old projects and jump full bore into A big Fallen Empire project - I'll call it "The Verdant Vaults" and it's an experiment in building a dungeon that changes (specifically becomes more alive and overgrown) as the players explore it. It starts a desolate space almost empty of encounters, but the longer it's explored the more it wakes up, and grows. I like the idea of the project, but I'm not sure if it's viable. Any of these three would likely end up on RPGnow - despite my dislike for charging for hobby products, I think I need a bit more exposure on these things, and that seems to be that way. Plus I might be able to hire someone else to do art that way, and I rather hate drawing.

Saturday, October 4, 2014

The project I’ve previously hinted at in finally
finished.A classic module length
adventure that relates to, but is in no way a direct sequel my previously
written Prison of the Hated Pretender.Designed to be used in any fantasy setting, it is not intended to be
especially strange or outside the norms for most traditional fantasy adventure games.

I’ve written the adventure using the Labyrinth Lord system, but it should
be easy enough to adapt to anything similar.